Wishing all of you and your loved ones a blessed Resurrection Sunday! Christ is risen indeed! May you enjoy this edited repost from the archives.
Christ’s birth, earthly ministry, betrayal, and crucifixion can all be described in triplets reflecting His Triune nature. This pattern continues through His resurrection and beyond!
Jesus prophesied to His disciples that after He was crucified and buried, He would spend three days in the tomb and rise again on the third day (Matthew 16:21; 17:22-23; 20:18-19; Mark 9:31;10:34; Luke 9:22;18:33). Even the Romans had heard of this prophecy, as they warned Pilate about it for fear that the disciples would steal His body to deceive others into thinking Jesus had risen from the dead (Matthew 27:63-64).
Christ’s actual resurrection after three days was foreshadowed by earlier events in Scripture and by His own use of symbolic language. He had said that He could destroy the temple of God and rebuild it in three days (Matthew 26: 61), which referred metaphorically to His willingly laying down His life and taking it up again three days later.
Jesus spoke of leaving His earthly body and entering His glorified body as being “perfected” on the third day. This was the most significant of the three miracles He told the Pharisees to relay to Herod, whom they said was threatening His life. The other two miracles were casting out devils and curing the sick (Luke 13: 31-32).
Even at the beginning of Genesis, the third day of creation symbolized the resurrection, when God created the earth appearing from beneath the water (Genesis 1 :9-13). Baptism uses this same symbolism of the believer standing in the water to represent Christ on the cross; submerged beneath the water to represent burial of the old man and sin nature; and coming up out of the water to represent living as a new creation in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:17).
Jesus explained His coming burial and resurrection by likening it to the prophet Jonah being entombed for three days and three nights in the whale's belly (Jonah 1:17), saying that He also would be in the heart of the earth for three days and three nights. He admonished the Jews, who were always looking for a sign to identify the Messiah, that this sign of His resurrection after three days would be the only one given to them (Matthew 12: 39-40).
When the women came to Christ’s tomb that first Easter morning and were shocked to find it empty, two angels reassured them that He had risen and reminded them of His three prophecies: “The Son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again” (Luke 24:7).
The apostle John describes Mary Magdalene encountering three heavenly beings on that miraculous morning: two angels in the tomb, one where Jesus’ feet had rested and the other at His head; and the risen Christ (John 20:11-18).
Luke names three women who told the unbelieving disciples of these remarkable happenings: Mary Magdalene, and Joanna, and Mary the mother of James (Luke 24:10). Still bewildered, two disciples set forth to Emmaus to talk things over on a long walk, which was about threescore furlongs from Jerusalem (Luke 24:13).
Jesus appeared to these two and joined them, making three travelers to Emmaus. In their grief and confusion they did not realize Who accompanied them (Luke 24:15-16), even though they said that it was the third day since His death (Luke 24:21). Jesus patiently yet fervently explained to them how all the Scriptures revealed Himself, yet they did not recognize Him until dinner, when He blessed the bread, broke it, and gave it to them (Luke 24:30).
Here is how Luke described their triplets of miraculous revelation: Luke 24: 31 And their eyes were opened, and they knew him; and he vanished out of their sight. 32 And they said one to another, Did not our heart burn within us, while he talked with us by the way, and while he opened to us the scriptures?
So Cleopas and his companion raced back to Jerusalem to tell the others of this Christ-sighting. Yet no sooner did they return and share the news than Jesus appeared in their midst, greeted by triplets of fear, not joy, from the disciples. They were “terrified and affrighted, and supposed that they had seen a spirit (Luke 24: 37).
But Jesus reassured them that He was not a ghost by three types of physical evidence: He showed them His hands and feet, He allowed them to handle His flesh and bones, and He even ate before them! (Luke 24: 38-43).
Next Jesus gave them three sources of Scriptural evidence about Himself: the law of Moses, the prophets, and the Psalms (Luke 24:44). But He emphasized the most important prophecy: that He would rise from the dead on the third day (Luke 24:45).
When the disciples went fishing, perhaps to clear their heads, or even thinking they might return to their former way of life now that Jesus was gone, He appeared to them. John tells us that this was the third time Jesus showed Himself to His disciples after He was risen from the dead (John 21:14). After instructing the disciples where to catch a boat load of fish, He feeds them a delectable breakfast that He had already prepared.
Three times, Jesus asks Peter if he loves Him, allowing Peter three opportunities to affirm his love and cleanse his conscience of the three times he denied Christ.(Matthew 26:75; Mark 14:72; John 13:38). Although Christ asked if Peter loved Him with agape, or self-sacrificing love, Peter stated his love using the term phileo, or kindly affection as one would have toward a brother. In response to Peter’s declarations, three times Jesus asked Peter to “Feed my sheep (lambs).” (John 21: 15-17).
Before ascending to Heaven, Jesus gave His disciples the three commands of the Great Commission: Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost (Matthew 28:19).
His last words therefore revealed His Triune nature, for He is the fullness of the Godhead bodily (Colossians 2:9). When we are saved by trusting Jesus Christ, the Holy Spirit enters our heart and teaches us about Christ, Who in turn is the Way to God the Father (John 14:9-26).
Paul reinforced and expanded on Jesus’s earthly teachings about rising on the third day as he explained the Gospel of grace revealed to Him by Christ; namely eternal life for all who place their faith in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 15:4) as the only Way to Heaven (John 14:6). Praise God that Christ conquered death, that we serve a risen Savior, and that we will live with Him forever more!
© 2013 Laurie Collett
Reposted from the archives
4 comments:
Hi Laurie, happy Easter to you and your family. Yes, the number three is very significant in the scriptures, and for some reason I have always loved the number 3. I have three crosses on a shelf in my workroom. God bless you for sharing and celebrating the resurrection of Jesus.
Hi Brenda,
Praise the Lord, He is risen indeed! My husband Richard carved three crosses for me, and they are also on the bookshelf over my desk! May you and your family be blessed in the joy of His resurrection so that all who know Him may have eternal life.
God bless you and your lovely ministry,
Laurie
Dear Laurie,
I hope you and Richard enjoyed a blessed Easter.
This issue of the three days and three nights in the bowels of the Earth of Matthew 12:40 which parallels Jonah's testimony of the three days and three nights in the belly of a fish has opened up a chance for me to accept the possibility of a Thursday Crucifixion.
The Hebrew day begins at sunset. Therefore it was still Sunday when Cleopas and his friend met the risen Lord. If that day was the third day since his death, then indeed, He was crucified on a Friday, as there never was a zero in Hebrew numerology. Friday was the first day, Saturday the second day and, Sunday the third day, the latter having begun at sunset Saturday.
However, that still leaves the problem of the three nights unsolved. Friday night and Saturday night are just two nights, not three. Even then, in Jewish thinking, what we call Friday night was to them already Saturday, and Saturday night to them was already Sunday. But that is still only two nights.
If Jesus was crucified on a Thursday, then the three hours before sunset would be the first day, all day Friday and Saturday would be the second and third day respectively, while the three nights (all after sunset) would be Friday, Saturday, and Sunday - with Him already risen before the break of day. The snag is, that idea would have had Cleopas counting four days since his death rather than three. Therefore, I can only accept all this as a possibility and not dogmatically. As it is, I will continue to remember and worship on Good Friday with all other Christians.
I apologise for such a long comment. I hope it makes a good discussion.
Blessings to you and Richard.
Dear Frank, We had a blessed Easter and hope you both did too, despite the difficulties. Many of the church holidays are set by church tradition, and not necessarily by Biblical accuracy, the classic example being Christmas celebrated on Dec. 25 because of its convenient proximity to the winter solstice already celebrated by the Druids. The resurrection clearly took place on Sunday, but I agree that the exact timing of the crucifixion is somewhat ambiguous. One of many mysteries I suspect will be resolved in our minds when we get to Heaven! Thanks as always for your thought-provoking comment. May God bless you and Alex, Laurie
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